Clinical Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine (ISSN 2639-6807)
Atrial Flutter is a typical anomalous heart rhythm that begins in the atrial
chambers of the heart. When it initially happens, it is generally connected
with a fast pulse and is named a sort of supraventricular tachycardia. Atrial
Flutter is described by a sudden-beginning (typically) ordinary anomalous heart
mood on an electrocardiogram (ECG) in which the pulse is
quick. Manifestations may incorporate a sentiment of the heart pulsating too
quick, too hard, or skipping thumps, chest distress, trouble breathing, an
inclination as though ones stomach has dropped, a sentiment of being woozy, or
loss of awareness.
In spite of the fact that this
irregular heart rhythm regularly happens in people with cardiovascular disorders (e.g. hypertension, coronary artery disease, and cardiomyopathy) and diabetes mellitus, it might
happen suddenly in individuals with generally typical hearts. It is ordinarily
not a steady cadence, and regularly deteriorates into atrial fibrillation (AF). Be that as it may, it
does infrequently hold on for a considerable length of time to years. Like the
irregular heart rhythm atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter likewise
prompts poor compression of the atrial assemblies of the heart.
There are two types of atrial
flutter, the common type I and rarer type II.
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